| Literature DB >> 34327017 |
Erick Gómez-Apo1, Alejandra Mondragón-Maya2, Martina Ferrari-Díaz2, Juan Silva-Pereyra2.
Abstract
Obesity is a global health problem with a broad set of comorbidities, such as malnutrition, metabolic syndrome, diabetes, systemic hypertension, heart failure, and kidney failure. This review describes recent findings of neuroimaging and two studies of cell density regarding the roles of overnutrition-induced hypothalamic inflammation in neurodegeneration. These studies provided consistent evidence of smaller cortical thickness or reduction in the gray matter volume in people with overweight and obesity; however, the investigated brain regions varied across the studies. In general, bilateral frontal and temporal areas, basal nuclei, and cerebellum are more commonly involved. Mechanisms of volume reduction are unknown, and neuroinflammation caused by obesity is likely to induce neuronal loss. Adipocytes, macrophages of the adipose tissue, and gut dysbiosis in overweight and obese individuals result in the secretion of the cytokines and chemokines that cross the blood-brain barrier and may stimulate microglia, which in turn also release proinflammatory cytokines. This leads to chronic low-grade neuroinflammation and may be an important factor for apoptotic signaling and neuronal death. Additionally, significant microangiopathy observed in rat models may be another important mechanism of induction of apoptosis. Neuroinflammation in neurodegenerative diseases (such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases) may be similar to that in metabolic diseases induced by malnutrition. Poor cognitive performance, mainly in executive functions, in individuals with obesity is also discussed. This review highlights the neuroinflammatory and neurodegenerative mechanisms linked to obesity and emphasizes the importance of developing effective prevention and treatment intervention strategies for overweight and obese individuals.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34327017 PMCID: PMC8302366 DOI: 10.1155/2021/6613385
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Obes ISSN: 2090-0708
Cytokines and chemokines outside CNS and in relation with microglia.
| References | Cell | Interleukins and chemokines |
|---|---|---|
| Makki et al. [ | Quiescent adipocyte | Adiponectin |
| Transforming growth factor | ||
| IL-10 | ||
| IL-4 | ||
| IL-13 | ||
| IL-1 (receptor antagonist) | ||
| Apelin | ||
| Activated adipocyte (obesity) | TNF-α | |
| IL-6 | ||
| Leptin | ||
| Adiponectin | ||
| Resistin | ||
| Visfatin | ||
| Angiotensin II | ||
| Plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1), also known as endothelial plasminogen activator inhibitor) | ||
|
| ||
| Wentworth et al. [ | Adipose tissue macrophages (lean) | Mannose receptor (CD206+) |
| Esser et al. [ | IL-10 | |
| Wang et al. [ | Arginase (ARG1) | |
| M1 macrophages (proinflammatory activity) | Platelet-derived growth factor | |
| Caspase 1 activation (inflammasomes: CD206+ / CD11c+) | ||
| IL-1 | ||
| Adipose tissue macrophages (obesity) | IL-6 | |
| Nitric oxide (NO) | ||
| CD11c and immune nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) | ||
| TNF- | ||
| IL-1 | ||
|
| ||
| Valdearcos et al. [ | Microglia M2 | IL-4R |
| IL-10 | ||
| Microglia M1 | ||
| IL-1 | ||
| IL-2 | ||
| IL-6 | ||
| IL-12 | ||
| IL-15 | ||
| IL-17 | ||
| IL-18 | ||
| IL-23 | ||
| IFN- | ||
| TNF- | ||
| c-Jun N-terminal kinases (JNKs) increased | ||
| Nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells (NF-kB) increased | ||
| Monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP1) | ||
| CX3CL1 (fractalkine: chemokine (C-X3-C motif)) (ligand 1) | ||
| Macrophage-stimulating protein receptor (MST1R) | ||
IL: interleukin; TNF: tumor necrosis factor; TGF: tumor growth factor.
Figure 1Pathogenesis of obesity-associated brain damage. Outside CNS: adipose tissue macrophages infiltrate the adipose tissue in obesity and contribute to insulin resistance. M1 or “classically activated” macrophages are induced by proinflammatory mediators, such as lipopolysaccharides and IFN-γ. M1 macrophages enhance proinflammatory cytokine production (TNF-α, IL-6, and IL-12), which can block the effects of insulin action on adipocytes (link between inflammation and insulin resistance) and generate reactive oxygen species (ROS), such as nitric oxide, via activation of iNOS (Nos2). Inside CNS: local and systemic inflammation induced by obesity can cause breakdown of the blood-brain barrier (BBB), a decrease in waste removal, and an increase in infiltration of immune cells. Microglia: activated microglia secrete proinflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α, and INF-γ), which stimulate inflammatory signaling in adjacent neurons, which in turn induces insulin and leptin resistance of neurons.
Characteristics and summary results of neuroimaging studies on obesity.
| Author, country | Study population | Assessment | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Herrmann et al. [ | Meta-analysis of 10 studies [ | MRI studies | Obese status: ↓ GMV: B IFG (including insula), L MFG, L preFC, L MTG, L PCG, L cerebellum, BA 34 (including L amygdala and L lenticular nucleus) |
| Voxel-wise meta-analysis: GMV | |||
| BMI | |||
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| Taki et al. [ |
| MRI: VBM: GMV, GMr | Men: ↑ BMI, ↓ GMV: B uncus, B cerebellum (anterior lobe), L FG, R SPL, R preCG, R IFG, B precuneus, B SFG, R midbrain |
| BMI | ↑ BMI, ↑ GMV: B IFG, B cerebellum (posterior lobe), R SFG, R STG, R ITG, L MTG, B Th (pulvinar), R CG, B Cn (heads), L preCG | ||
| No significant correlations in women | |||
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| García-García et al. [ | Meta-analysis of 21 studies (including 73, 76-80, 82-83, 85, 88, 115) N = 5,882 | MRI studies: VBM analyses: GMV | Obesity-related variables are associated with ↓ GMV mainly in mPFC, B cerebellum, L TPole |
| Obesity-related variables (BMI, WC, WHR, BFD) | Less robust results: preCG, IPC | ||
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| Yokum et al. [ |
| MRI: VBM: | Total GMV: obese < OW, lean |
| WMV and GMV | Overall WMV: obese < OW | ||
| BMI | ↑ BMI, ↑ GMV: MOG | ||
| ↑ BMI, ↑ WMV: MTG, FG, PHipG, RO, DS | |||
| One-year follow-up: ↑ BMI, ↓ GMV: SFG, MF | |||
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| Papageorgiou et al. [ |
| MRI: DTI: brain fractional anisotropy | ↑ BMI was related with ↓ ATR, PTR, IFOF, ILF, SLF, CC, UF, IC, CST, cingulum |
| WM | |||
| BMI | |||
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| Repple et al. [ |
| MRI: DTI: brain fractional anisotropy, WM | ↑ BMI globally, ↓ WM integrity (replication in an independent sample) |
| BMI | |||
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| Kullman et al. [ |
| MRI: DTI, voxel-based quantification analysis | ↑ BMI, ↓ predominantly in the SLF, ATR, IC, and CC |
| Obese = 12, A: 26.9 (4.5), BMI: 33.2 (3.2) | WM | ||
| OW = 12, A: 26.1 (2), BMI: 28.1 (1.4) | BMI | ||
| Lean = 24, A: 26.7 (3.7), BMI: 22.4 (1.6) | |||
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| Kim et al. [ |
| MRI: vertex-based and shape analysis | ↑ BMI, ↓ B Cn |
| Subcortical structures volume | ↑ BMI, ↑ B Th, B Pu, B GP, B hip | ||
| BMI | |||
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| Raji et al. [ |
| MRI: tensor-based morphometry | Globally: ↑ BMI, ↓ GMV and WMV |
| Obese = 14, A: 76.9 (2.8), BMI: 32.9 (2.5) | BMI, FPI, T2DM | ↑ BMI, ↓ V: OFC, hip, Pu, GP, Th | |
| OW = 51, A: 77.2 (2.6), BMI: 27.5 (1.4) | ↑ FPI, ↓ V: splenium CC, OFC, hip | ||
| Lean = 29, A:77.5 (4), BMI: 22.5 (1.9) | ↑ T2DM, ↓ V: genu and splenium CC, ACC, mTL, OL, Cn, Pu, GP | ||
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| Dekkers et al. [ |
| MRI: multiparametric brain mapping; DTI | In women: ↑ TBF, ↑ GMV, WMV; ↓ GP |
| TBF | In men: ↑ TBF, ↓ GMV, Th, Cn, Pu, GP, hip, Nac | ||
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| Le et al. [ |
| MRI: VBM and rsFC analyses Hypothalamic GMV | ↑ BMI, ↑ hypothalamic GMV, and ↑ connectivity with the insula, Th, GP, and cerebellum but ↓ with hypothalamic connectivity with the SPL |
| BMI: 25.8 (4.7) | BMI | ||
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| Ou et al. [ |
| MRI: VBM and TBSS analyses: GMV, WMV | Obese: ↓ GMV: R MTG, B Th, L SPL, L preCG, postCG, L cerebellum |
| Obese = 12, A: 9.1 (0.9), BMI: 24.4 (3.4) | BMI | Obese: ↑ WMV: B posterior IFOF, B posterior SFOF, B SCR | |
| Lean = 12, A: 9.8 (0.7), BMI: 15.8 (1) | |||
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| Perlaki et al. [ |
| MRI: VBM: GMV, GMM | VBM analysis controlled for age, sex, and ICV; no significant associations between GMM and BMI z-score |
| ROIs | ROI: ↑ BMI z-score, ↑ B amygdala, ↑ Nac | ||
| BMI z-score | |||
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| Sharkey et al. [ |
| MRI: cortical thickness | No significant correlations were found between cortical thickness and BMI z-score using FDR multiple comparison correction |
| ROIs | |||
| BMI z-score | |||
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| Yokum and Stice [ |
| MRI: VBM: GMV, WMV | BF gain < BF loss: Pu |
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| BMI: BF gain, BF stability, BF loss | BF gain > BF loss: dorsal/subgenual ACC | |
| BF gain > BF stability: subgenual ACC | |||
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| Marqués-Iturria et al. [ |
| MRI: ICV, TGM, CGM, sub-CGM, WMV, mean surface, mean thickness | ↑ BMI, ↓ L CGM: SFG, MFG (caudal), ACC (rostral and caudal), preCG |
| Obesity = 19, A: 33.7 (5.7), BMI: 36.1 (5.9) | BMI | ↑ BMI, ↓ R CGM: mOFC, SFG, MFG (rostral), FPole, OFC | |
| Lean = 18, A: 32.3 (5.9), BMI: 22.54 (1.94) | ↑ BMI, ↓ V: L vDC, R vDC, brainstem | ||
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| Ottino-González et al. [ |
| MRI | Overweight: ↑ AL index, ↓ cortical thickness Lean: ↑ AL index, ↑ cortical thickness in pars triangularis, L medial SFG, supramarginal gyrus, IPC, precuneus |
| OW-obese = 34, A: 31.8 (6.1), BMI: 31.4 (5) | Cortical thickness | ||
| Lean = 29, A: 30.07 (6.2), BMI: 22.35 (1.82) | BMI, WC | ||
| AL index (15 biomarkers) | |||
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| Shan et al. [ |
| MRI: GMV | ↑ Creatinine, ↑ GMV ↑ HbA1c, LDL, triglyceride, ↓ GMV |
| Obese = 37, A: 27.8 (6.9), BMI: 40 (6.5) | BMI, DBP, creatinine; FBS, HbA1c; HDL, LDL; SBP, SUA, triglyceride | ||
| Lean = 39, A: 26.7 (6.8), BMI: 21.8 (1.8) | Obese < lean | ||
| R SPG, SOG, AG, cerebellum | |||
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| Beyer et al. [ |
| MRI: VBM: GMV, ICV | Metabolic profile (↑ BMI, WHR, HbA1c, leptin, CRP, ↓ adiponectin) associated with ↓ GMV |
| BMI: 27.7 (4.1) | BMI, WHR, metabolic profile (adiponectin, CRP, HbA1c, HDL, IL-6, SBP, TC) | Th, B insular Cx, L amygdala-hip, TPole, cerebellum | |
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| Kotkowski et al. [ |
| MRI: VBM: GMV | Metabolic syndrome was associated with ↓ GMV |
| MetS = 104, A: 37.3 (13.2), BMI: 34.5 (5.5) | Cerebellum, OFC, R insula, cuneus, B Cn (body), R TL, R amygdala, BA34. | ||
| Controls = 104, 37.3 (13.2), BMI: 24.3 (3.8) | MetS | ||
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| Climie et al. [ |
| MRI: VBM: GMV, hip volume | T2DM is associated with ↓ GMV, ↓ hip volume, ↑ WHR, BMI, ↓ physical activity |
| T2DM = 258, A: 67 (7) | WHR, BMI, physical activity (steps/day), and blood biochemistry | T2DM-GMV association is mediated by WHR | |
| Non-T2DM = 302, A: 72 (7) | |||
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| Nouwen et al. [ |
| MRI: VBM, TBSS: GMV, WMV, T2DM, obesity GMV: control > T2DM: B Cn, B Pu | Control > obese: R hip, R amygdala-hip, L amygdala, L Pu |
| T2DM = 14, A: 16.1 (1.5) | Control > T2DM + obese: R Pu/Cn, L Cn, L Pu, L Th/Cn, L hip/amygdala | ||
| Obesity = 20, A: 14.9 (2) | WM: T2DM < controls: L CST, mCC, L fornix, L ThR, L RLIC, L IFOF, R ACR, CC (genu), L uncinate, cingulum | ||
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| Bernardes et al. [ |
| MRI: CT, surface area, GMV | CT: obese + T2DM < controls, obese (normoglycemic) < controls: R insula |
| Obese + T2DM = 28, A: 60.4 (5) | T2DM, adiposity, glucose, and insulin | Surface area: obese + T2DM < controls: L lateral occipital | |
| Obese (normoglycemic) = 16, A: 58 (8.4) | Surface area, GMV: Th, obese + T2DM < obese (normoglycemic): L paracentral | ||
| Control = 31, A: 57 (7.1) | |||
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| Rofey et al. [ |
| MRI: GMV | GMV, WM integrity: Cn, Th |
| T2DM = 5, A: 18 (1.4) | BMI, T2DM | T2DM < obese < lean: Cn | |
| Obese (without T2DM) = 5, A: 15.4 (2.2) | T2DM < obese; T2DM < lean: Th | ||
| Lean = 5, A: 14.5 (2.5) | |||
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| Redel et al. [ |
| MRI: VBM: GMV, voxel-wise GM, WMV | Global GMV: obese + T2DM < control |
| T2DM = 20, A: 16.7 (2.6), BMI: 37.8 (4.7) | BMI, T2DM | Regional GMV: Obese + T2DM < control: R mTL, L fusiform, L IPG, R cerebellum, B ITG, R cingulum, R MOG, R IOG, L Cn, L angular, R lingual | |
| Control = 20, A: 16.7 (2), BMI: 24.5 (5.2) | Obese + T2DM > control: B Pu, R ITG, R Th, B paracentral | ||
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| Yoon et al. [ |
| MRI: GMV, CT | Global mean CT: T2DM + OW and T2DM < control |
| T2DM + OW = 50, A: 49 (7.4), BMI: 28.1 (2) | T2DM, BMI | Regional CT: T2DM + OW and T2DM < control: B FG, L ITG, B STG, B SFG, L MFG, B IFC, L insula, B lingual Cx, R OFC | |
| T2DM = 50, A: 49.3 (8.1), BMI: 22.8 (2) | WM: T2DM + OW and T2DM < control: Fornix, CC, CST, IFOF, ATR | ||
| Control = 50, A: 49 (7.8), BMI: 22.7 (1.8) | Duration-related alteration in CT: T2DM + OW > T2DM | ||
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| Caunca et al. [ |
| MRI: ICV, mean CT, WMHV | ↑ BMI and ↑ WC z-score, ↓ mean CT |
| Obese < normal: CT | |||
| BMI z-score, WHR z-score, WC z-score, adiponectin | No association between obesity and cerebral small vessel disease (WMHV) | ||
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| Hayakawa et al. [ |
| MRI: voxel-wise analyses | Men: ↑ WC, BMI, ↓ GMV: B ITG, R MTG, L fusiform, L Th, L red nucleus, L mFG, R SFG, R IFG, R preCG, R postCG, B cerebellum |
| Men = 523, A: 55.3 (9.7) | GMV; GMr, ICV | Women: ↑ WC, BMI, ↓ GMV: B Th, R red nucleus, L preCG, L IFG, L mFG, R hip | |
| BMI: 24.7 (3.1), WC (cm): 88.5 (8.1) | BMI, WC | Regions were more widespread in men than in women | |
| Women = 269, A: 55.2 (9.9) | |||
| BMI: 22 (3.3), WC (cm): 81.2 (9.8) | |||
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| Hamer and Batty [ |
| MRI: GMV | ↑ BMI, WHR, total fat mass, ↓ GMV |
| OW = 4,167, A: 56 (7.5) | BMI, WHR, total FM, FM index (total FM (kg)/height (m)) | Combination of overall obesity (BMI) and central obesity (WHR) was associated with the lowest GMV | |
| Lean = 3,680, A: 54.7 (7.5) | ↑ BMI, ↓ Pu, Pa, Nac | ||
| ↑ WHR, ↓ Th, Cn, Pa | |||
| ↑ Fat index, ↓ Pu, Pa, Nac | |||
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| Croll et al. [ |
| MRI: GMV, WMV | ↑ BMI and FM index were cross-sectionally associated with ↓ WMV |
| Longitudinal study = 1,844, A: 60.9 (9.9) | BMI, DXA: FM index, FFM index | ↑ FFM index was associated with ↑ GMV | |
Note. Brain Anatomy. ACC: anterior cingulate cortex; ACR: anterior corona radiata; AG: angular gyrus; ATR: anterior thalamic radiation; B: bilateral; Cn: caudate nucleus; CC: corpus callosum; CG: cingulate gyrus; CST: corticospinal tract; DS: dorsal striatum; FG: fusiform gyrus; FPole: frontal pole; Hip: hippocampus; IC: internal capsule; IFC: inferior frontal gyrus; IFOF: inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus; ILF: inferior longitudinal fasciculus; IOG: inferior occipital gyrus; IPG: inferior parietal gyrus; ITG: inferior temporal gyrus; L: left; mCC: medial corpus callosum; mTL: medial temporal lobe; mOFC: medial orbitofrontal cortex; mFG: medial frontal gyrus; MFG: middle frontal gyrus; mPFC: medial prefrontal cortex; MTG: middle temporal gyrus; MOG: middle occipital gyrus; Nac: nucleus accumbens; OFC: orbitofrontal cortex; OL: occipital lobe; Pa: pallidum; PHipG: parahippocampal gyrus; PTR: posterior thalamic radiation; postCG: postcentral gryrus; pre CG: precentral gyrus; Pu: putamen; R: right; RLIC: retrolenticular internal capsule; RO: Rolandic operculum; SCR: superior corona radiata; SFG: superior frontal gyrus; SFOF: superior fronto-occipital fasciculus; SLF: superior longitudinal fasciculus; SPL: superior parietal lobe; SPG: superior parietal gyrus; SOG: superior occipital gyrus; STG: superior temporal gyrus; Th: thalamus; TL: temporal lobe; TPole: temporal pole; UF: uncinate fasciculus; vDC: ventral diencephalon. Neuroimaging. CGM: cortical gray matter; CT: cortical thickness; DTI: diffusion tensor imaging; FDR: false discovery rate; GMM: gray matter mass; GMr: gray matter ratio (percentage of GMV in the intracranial volume); GMV: gray matter volume; ICV: intracranial volume; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; rsFC: resting-state functional connectivity; ROI: region of interest; sub-CGM: subcortical gray matter; VBM: voxel-based morphometry; V: volume; TBSS: track-based spatial statistic; TGM; total gray matter. Obesity Assessment. BMI: body mass index; BMI z-score: standardized BMI; BF: body fat; BFD: body fat distribution; DBP: diastolic blood pressure; DXA: dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry; FFM: fat-free mass; FBS: fasting blood sugar (fasting glucose); FM: fat mass; FPI: fasting plasma insulin levels; HbA1c: glycated hemoglobin; HDL: high-density lipoprotein; LDL: low-density lipoprotein; MetS: metabolic syndrome; OW: overweight; SBP: systolic blood pressure; SUA: serum uric acid; TBF: total body fat; TC: total cholesterol; WC: waist circumference; WHR: waist-to-hip ratio; WMV: white matter volume.